A compilation of Mississippi legalized child abandonment cases and “safe haven” failures
This post must first begin with an expression of gratitude, because this post itself is little more than a compilation of the work Bastardette has done over the course of years with some technical support (and formatting help) from my partner, thrown in for good measure.
In the course of writing my post about the baby dump law in Mississippi, After almost a decade, Mississippi “safe haven” legalized child abandonment scheme still fails, last week, I dropped a quick e-mail on Marley Greiner/Bastardette to ask about any history relating to the dumps in Mississippi she might have or overview statistics she might have pulled together in the course of her work.
For years Marley compiled and authored the Baby Dump News (or BDN,) a weekly e-mailed round up of media reports and other information pertinent to newborn abandonment, infanticide, “safe haven”/”Baby Moses” legislation, and related matters.
As many states don’t compile statistics on these matters, and even those that do had numbers that time and again proven incorrect when compared with even newspaper reports, Marley’s tracking during this first decade of the dump laws provided critically important documentation.
In many ways, she tracked the rise and growth of the baby dump industry, it’s proponents, it’s opponents, and the week in and week out unfolding saga through webpages, blogs, emails, legislative hearings and newspaper articles. In the course of this tracking, she became somewhat an “inadvertent” expert on what was actually happening across the country in relation to such.
He response to my brief email stunned me, within mere hours of my request, she had come back to me with all the issues of the BDN with information about cases in Mississippi as well as additional places to search for cases. (This was more than I possibly could have hoped for.)
With the help of my partner, Mike, we went back through our digital archive of the Baby Dump News (as to date, only archives from 2007 are available online) and pulled these news reports.
Obviously these cannot by their very nature give a full picture of what has gone on in Mississippi as some untold number of neonaticides are simply never discovered.
In other cases, those of abandoned kids, or bodies found, again, it then becomes a question of whether or not the story was reported, or even if it was reported, whether the news article was found in the course of Marley’s research.
There may well be other cases that were reported on not cataloged below.
Some states have routinely been folding border babies, (kids born in hospitals and never taken home by their parents) into their “safe haven saves” statistics, but in theory at least, according to one of the articles Marley found, the Mississippi law should not be including them in the totals.
As to whether or not the state’s totals contain other oddities or not, we’ll likely never know. Reporters simply take them at face value.
These days, tools like google alerts (which first went live in 2003) have certainly made doing this kind of research much easier, but there’s still no substitute for solid research and looking beyond those numbers at what the genuine circumstances involve.
Unfortunately what we’ve found in other states is that even if border babies were not originally folded into “safe haven” statistics, over the years they may come to be.
So bearing in mind the limitations of what these links represent, here is what I’ve been able to mine back out of Marley’s work:
-
BABY DUMP NEWS, June 13, 2002 V. 2,
#20
MISSISSIPPI
Jackson Clarion-Ledger, May 22, 2002
Life sentence in death of newborn is upheld
http://www.clarionledger.com/news/0205/22/m17.htmlJACKSON– Conviction of Lindsay Kathryn Welch upheld by Mississippi
Court of Appeals. Welch was a student at Mississippi State when she
gave birth in her dorm room. Prosecutors claim she let baby die and
then put the body in the trash. -
BABY DUMP NEWS, October 27, 2002, v2,
#40
MISSISSIPPI
WAPT-TV, Jackson, October 25, 2002
Newborn drop-off law nets 6 babies in first year
http://www.thejacksonchannel.com/news/1741097/detail.htmlJACKSON–Six babies left in Mississippi hospitals since state’s safe
haven law went into effect more than a year ago. Four left in Hinds
County, one in Union County and one in Harrison county. (No mention
if these were authentic safe haven drops or boarder baby
abandonments.) One has been adopted and the rest are in fostercare
waiting for adoption finalization. Gloria Thornton Salters, of DHS,
says without any apparent authority, that if not for the law, the
children would have been left to die. -
BABY DUMP NEWS, November 3, 2002, v2,
#41
MISSISSIPPI
Biloxi Clarion-Ledger, October 29, 2002
Newborn drop-off law saves 6 lives in
state
http://www.sunherald.com/mld/sunherald/news/state/4372401.htm?template=contentModules/printstory.jspBILOXI–Longer version of last week’s article. Under law hospitals
can ask questions about child’ health, but cannot ask who the mother
is or where she is from. Law does not include mothers who give birth
in a hospital and decide to abandon their children there. In those
cases, mothers are required to be registered at hospital under their
names and to sign waivers to turn over their babies. If mother wants
to reclaim baby shortly after legal abandonment state reportedly will
work with her and have her attend classes. None of the mothers who
left babies under the state’s program have tried to get them back. -
BABY DUMP NEWS, November 17, 2002, v2,
#43
MISSISSIPPI
Jackson Clarion-Ledger, November 16, 2002
Conviction stands in baby’s
death
http://www.clarionledger.com/news/0211/16/m16.htmlJACKSON–Mississippi Supreme Court refuses to hear appeal of Lindsay
Kathryn Welch in the death of her newborn found in a trashcan in
1999. Claimed illegal search of her garbage left outside of home
after police received tip about baby. Welch, a former U. of
Mississippi student is doing 8 years in prison. -
BABY DUMP NEWS, January 19, 2003, v3
#3
MISSISSIPPI
Jackson Clarion-Ledger, January 18, 2003
Police hunt for body of infant believed
discarded
http://www.clarionledger.com/news/0301/18/m07.htmlCLEVELAND–Police search landfill for infant believed to have been
hauled there after being placed in dumpster. 19-year old Delta State
University student triggered search after she sought medical treatment
shortly after giving birth. Says baby was stillborn and born off
campus. Mother, described as distraught, is cooperating with
authorities. According to article, as of October 2002, 6 babies have
been dropped-off under the safe haven program. -
BABY DUMP NEWS, March 16, 2003, v3
#11
MISSISSIPPI
Jackson Clarion-Ledger, March 16, 2003
Abandoned-baby laws
criticized
http://www.clarionledger.com/news/0303/16/m06.htmlJACKSON–Mississippi Special Assistant Attorney General Elizabeth
Carroll Hocker disagrees with EBD report. Says 9 infants, 6 of them
in 2002, have been safely anonymously abandoned in state. Feels that
they weren’t found dead is good sign. 7 have been adopted and 2 are
in prospective homes. -
BABY DUMP NEWS, November 30, 2003, v3
#48
MISSISSIPPI
Jackson Sun Herald, November 25, 2003
Mississippi calls newborn program a
success
http://www.sunherald.com/mld/sunherald/7346294.htmJACKSON–Puff piece on MS SH law. Claims that 13 babies have been
dropped off and another 3 were dropped off and retrieved. -
BABY DUMP NEWS, April 25, 2004, v4
#18
MISSISSIPPI-
Jackson Clarion-Ledger, April 20, 2004
Dead infant found in
bag
http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040420/NEWS01/404200380/1002JACKSON–Newborn found dead in garbage bag at Madison County
landfill. Unclear how baby died or how long it was in bag. - WLBT-TV, Jackson, April 20, 2004
State law protects unwanted
newborns
http://www.wlbt.com/Global/story.asp?S=1797624&nav=2CSfMQOBJACKSON–Review of state SH law and its history. Ol’ Miss Medical
Center clinical nurse Kelly Joyner says several infants have been
dropped off since law went into effect July 2001, including one in
March. Special Asst. AG, Elizabeth Hocker says that 11 babies “have
been turned over to hospitals instead of abandoned.” - WLBT-TV, Jackson, April 21, 2004
Baby in garbage had just been
born
http://www.wlbt.com/Global/story.asp?S=1801075JACKSON–Autopsy indicates baby was suffocated and case now treated as
homicide. Police have a few phone tips; mother could face capital
murder charge.
-
Jackson Clarion-Ledger, April 20, 2004
-
BABY DUMP NEWS, May 2, 2004-, v4
#19
MISSISSIPPI- WLBT-TV, Jackson, April 25, 2004
Deceased newborn found at dump
site
http://www.wlbt.com/Global/story.asp?S=1811998&nav=2CSfMZE6JACKSON–Update on landfill case. (BDN v4 #18). Police ask public
assistance in solving case. Reward of up to $1000 offered through
Crime Stoppers. - WLBT-TV, Jackson, April 26, 2004
Cops hope DNA will identify
infant
http://www.wlbt.com/Global/story.asp?S=1812871&nav=2CSfMZrdJACKSON–Detectives following up tips received after Crime Stoppers
broadcast. DNA tests ordered on body. Jackson Police Department
planning funeral and burial. - University of Mississippi Daily Mississippian, April 28, 2004
ERs take unwanted
newborns
http://www.thedmonline.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2004/04/28/408f726849f17OXFORD–Officials publicize state’s SH law. Baptist Memorial Hospital
in Jackson has had at least one drop-off. Hospital doesn’t offer
counseling services for mother but does referrals. Family Crisis
Services in Oxford says women who SH are “under a lot of stress” and
FCS would offer them counseling services. “We would ask them to sit
down and discuss the reasons why they’re doing this. We want to offer
them counseling before they make such a drastic decision.” Assistant
Police Chief says if women tried to drop off baby at police
station, they would be referred to FCS. Fire chief says he has never
had an abandoned baby case in 32 years with department. - WLBT-TV, Jackson, April 30, 2004
Donations pour in for newborn’s
burial
http://www.wlbt.com/Global/story.asp?S=1824085&nav=2CSfMga3JACKSON–Jackson-area residents continue to donate funds for funeral
arrangements for baby. Plot donated; Peoples Funeral home offers
services and other arrangements; music teacher purchases burial
outfit. Police chief believes baby may have come from Madison or
Rankin County.
- WLBT-TV, Jackson, April 25, 2004
-
BABY DUMP NEWS, May 16, 2004, v4
#21
MISSISSIPPI- WLBT-TV, Jackson, May 12, 2004
Services held for abandoned
infant
http://www.wlbt.com/Global/story.asp?S=1859273JACKSON–Update on landfill /Baby John Paul Doe case BDN v4 # 18, 19,
20). Account of baby’s funeral; quotes from those who attended. - Jackson Clarion-Ledger, May 12, 2004
Tiny casket weighs heavy in
“significance”
http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040512/NEWS01/405120364/1002JACKSON–Feature on Angela Washington, who returned home from hospital
after suffering miscarriage on day she learned of discovery of Baby
John Paul Doe’s body.
- WLBT-TV, Jackson, May 12, 2004
-
BABY DUMP NEWS, May 30, 2004, v4
#23
MISSISSIPPI- Biloxi Sun-Herald, May 20, 2004
Baby boy abandoned at church
door
http://www.sunherald.com/mld/sunherald/8708522.htmGULFPORT–Newborn boy, Baby Matthew, left on doorstep of St. Matthew
Evangelical Lutheran Church. County Prosecutor says he’s been in DA’s
office for 14 years and never heard of an abandoned baby
before. Police Lt. Alfred Sexton says that abandonment didn’t comply
with SH law, but may be in the “spirit of the law.” Child welfare
workers say it is usual for babies to be abandoned in public places;
usually left in hospitals. - WLOX-TV, Biloxi, May 23, 2004
Counselor wants compassion for mother of abandoned
baby
http://www.wlox.com/Global/story.asp?S=1888715GULFPORT–Rachel Nilsen, from Pregnancy Resources of Mississippi in
Ocean Springs hopes that authorities aren’t hard on person who left
baby at church. Admits it would have been better to drop off baby
in “the care of a responsible adult” but believes there’s a “real
possibility that this person felt that they could not care for this
child and they wanted to put this child in some good hands.” - Biloxi Sun Herald, May 25, 2004
Charges in baby case await
investigation
http://www.sunherald.com/mld/thesunherald/8751943.htmGULFPORT–DA declines to press charges in Baby Matthew case pending
outcome of final investigation. Mother known but not yet named.
Unclear if she is asking Youth Court for custody and if charges will
be filed after Youth Court judge rules in case. Relative of mother
called Sun Herald on Saturday saying mother was very scared and
panicked and asked if she could be arrested for abandonment. First
baby abandonment in Harrison County since 1993 when a girl was found
dead on I 10. DHS says 14 babies have been SH since law went into
effect. - Biloxi Sun Herald, May 29, 2004
Baby law not
well-known
http://www.sunherald.com/mld/sunherald/news/local/8790050.htmGULFPORT–Info piece on Mississippi SH law; complains that schools
don’t teach how to abandon your baby in the curriculum. Anon. caller
to Sun Herald asked where they could find poster and hotline number,
and paper finally learned that Attorney General is responsible for
publicity.
- Biloxi Sun-Herald, May 20, 2004
-
BABY DUMP NEWS, June 13, 2004, v 4,
#25
MISSISSIPPI-
Biloxi Sun Herald, June 8, 2004
Focus on drop-off law
grows
http://www.sunherald.com/mld/thesunherald/news/local/8865803.htmJACKSON–Update on landfill/ Baby John Paul Doe case (BDN v4 # 18, 19,
20, 21). DNA evidence rules out suspect in newborn’s death. No
details. - Jackson Clarion Ledger, June 9, 2004
Police back to square one in dead baby
case
http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040609/NEWS01/406090351/1002/NEWS01JACKSON–Information on state’s SH law. Says 14 babies have been
“saved” since law went into effect 7/2001. Beth Casey, counselor for
Harrison County Youth Court wants SH publicity to target high school
and college students. “Your high schoolers and college kids who
become pregnant all too often try to conceal their pregnancy rather
than tell someone. People need to know that churches are not a safe
place according to state law.”
-
Biloxi Sun Herald, June 8, 2004
-
BABY DUMP NEWS, June 20, 2004, v 4
#25
MISSISSIPPI
JacksonChannel.com, 6/17/04
Autopsy slated for infant found at
UMC
http://www.thejacksonchannel.com/news/3429856/detail.htmlJACKSON–Body of newborn girl found by workers sorting sheets at
University Medical Center; not full term and officials suspect it was
stillborn. Looking for parents. -
BABY DUMP NEWS, June 27, 2004, v4
#26
MISSISSIPPI- WLBT-TV. Jackson, June 21, 2004
Dead baby at UMC may have been put in laundry
accidentally
http://www.wlbt.com/Global/story.asp?S=1954849&nav=2CSfO3fnJACKSON–Update on UMC case. (BDN v4 # 26). Body found in laundry
determined to be stillborn; may have been placed in laundry by
mistake. Investigation continues. - Jackson Clarion-Ledger, June 23, 2004
Investigation confirms stillborn mistaken placed in UMC
laundry
http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040623/NEWS01/40623002/1002JACKSON–Simultaneous stillbirths at UMC caused mix-up which led to
one body going to laundry instead of pathology. No criminal charges
expected.
- WLBT-TV. Jackson, June 21, 2004
-
BABY DUMP NEWS, August 8, 2004–v 4
#33
MISSISSIPPI- Greenwood Commonwealth, August 3, 2004
Woman suspected of killing her baby arrested by
police
http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=12591564&BRD=1838&PAG=461&dept_id=104621&rfi=6BELZONI–Lasalle Denise Brown, 24. arrested on Humphreys County
warrant in investigation of disappearance of newborn. State HS called
authorities when they learned that her newborn could not be located
after Brown’s boyfriend, Calvin Stowers, 39, removed baby from
residence and she had not seen the baby since. Stowers already
charged with murder and is in jail. - Biloxi Sun Herald, August 6, 2004
Search suspended for body of missing
newborn
http://www.sunherald.com/mld/sunherald/news/politics/9336304.htmBELZONI–Police suspend search for baby’s body; claim they have enough
evidence to carry case. Brown says she saw Stowers put baby in
garbage can.
- Greenwood Commonwealth, August 3, 2004
-
BABY DUMP NEWS, May 29, 2005
MISSISSIPPI
Spero News, May 23, 2005
Mississippi pro-lifers intervene
http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?idCategory=32&idsub=120&id=1441NO DATELINE–Feature on Mississippi anti-abortion radical Roy McMillan
who was found naked and abandoned at birth in a shoe box on the steps
of a church.
2006- still working on data.
2007- (online)– Marley appears not to have found any articles relating to Mississippi.
2008- BDN ceases publication. Marley was kind enough to search through her personal files for that year, but has found no articles relating to Mississippi (yet).
2009- still working, but did send across the sad case of Theresa Clincy who abandoned 2 kids: 1, a 3-month old on a porch. The kids were able to remain in the family, living with her sister according to the last few piece.
There are a number of articles about the case and WAPT in particular had a fair amount of coverage.
- March 11, 2009: Boy Who Found Abandoned Baby Honored At School
- March 15, 2009: $25,000 Bond Keeps Abandoned Baby’s Mother In Jail
- March 18, 2009: DA To Revoke Probation For Mother Of Abandoned Child
- April 1, 2009: Abandoned Baby’s Mother Awaiting Mental Evaluation
- April 13, 2009: Abandoned Baby’s Aunt Cares For Sister’s Children
- April 24, 2009: Abandoned Baby’s Aunt Keeping Family Together
- July 22, 2009 Single Mother Asks For Help For Jailed Sister’s Kids
2010– I will handle this in a separate post (or posts) later this week as the latest cases certainly deserve a post (if not posts) all their own.
But the (at least) three cases I’ll be working with will be those of:
- Linda Nash who stabbed her newborn to death. The baby was born at home; Linda says she didn’t know she was pregnant. She’s a Type 2 diabetic, and an adoptee.
- the dead baby found in a suitcase earlier this summer
- and this latest child abandonment of a (live) child left at a Salvation Army donation drop off, outside the legalized child abandonment system
Again, the post really represents the work Marley has done over the course of a decade. I simply wanted to provide some background context to the Mississippi piece I was writing. On any one of these cases there are a number of articles, some of which are listed here, some of which aren’t.
Mississippi is but one case study of how these laws simply have not achieved what they promised they would. Children are still abandoned and dead babies are still being found. Women are still going to jail and families are still being torn apart.
Kids are being stripped of their identities, family history, context, medical histories etc. in a gross violation of their human rights.
Even of those women who do bring their kids to a baby dump site, their post-birth health and safety, let alone parental rights, physical and psychological needs are all too often considered secondary to “catching” a kid (most of whom, in Mississippi at least, appear to be entering the adoption system.)
It’s a mess, but a mess far too many people are just fine with.
(At least until some of these kids grow up and are old enough to speak on their own behalf, that is.)
October 19th, 2010 at 5:49 pm
I am floored by your many kind words about my work. I always feel like such a drudge. I am happy that you’ve been able to put my work to such good use! Recently Google flaked on me and I’ve received no alerts for over a month. I need to go back and try to find some new stuff.
As you know, digging up this material is a nightmare. Often there will be an initial story or two, and then the story retires from the news cycle and it’s never revisited, so we have no way of knowing the disposition, outside of trying to find something in online court records. Of course, “official” state records are totally off since most states have no criteria for collection or standards of reporting. And, it’s nobody’s business anyway.
I found my misplaced 2006 files and there were no news reports for that year, so you’ve got a accurate report here.
October 20th, 2010 at 1:27 am
Seriously, when I called you an “inadvertent” expert on this I meant it. It not merely that you have compiled the data, it’s the sheer amount of it you also keep stored in your brain, on tap, that we’ve had many conversations over.
I’m just glad to see the first of what I hope may inspire other state “case studies” as there is a long sad story here, but as you and I know well, precious few are even talking about it, let alone compiling the raw bits and pieces of such.
The “official” state tabulations are a wreck as we showed doing the Nebraska work on the big kid dumps years back.
In any case, heartfelt thanks for going through 2006 and for ALL your hard work.
It’s appreciated more than you know.
October 20th, 2010 at 1:53 am
I can’t wait to learn why Ohio’s SFY 2008 figures went from 23 cases to 9 in a week.
October 20th, 2010 at 3:12 am
Nor can I!
With a tip of the hat to The Pretenders,
A, O, Way to go Ohio.
I went back to Ohio statistics, and 14 baby dumps were gone… .